Ending bear baiting
We work to stop bears being cruelly exploited in bear baiting – an inhumane blood sport where bears, unable to defend themselves, battle against trained dogs for entertainment.
Brutal 'entertainment'
In rural Pakistan, large crowds gather to watch bears battle groups of trained dogs. The bears are captured and forced to endure immense pain even before they fight, with their canine teeth broken, muzzles painfully pierced with nose rings and claws often removed. The bears suffer terrible injuries, rarely living past the age of eight. When one bear dies, the cycle starts again, with more young wild bears forced into captivity and torment.
Bear baiting with dogs is illegal and causes intense, unjustified suffering — and you can help us put a stop to it.
Our work
Since 1997, we’ve been working with the Pakistan Bioresource Research Centre (BRC) to end bear baiting. As a result, together we've decreased the number of bear baiting events dramatically. Bears are now able to live better lives, and so are their owners. Our work includes:
- Preventing bear baiting events, by working with wildlife officials and local partners to share information.
- Strengthening legislation and making sure laws banning bear baiting are enforced.
- Seeking new legislation that will make it illegal to own a bear, or will at least ban the use of bears for baiting, dancing and begging.
- Reducing demand for bear baiting, by working with teachers, religious leaders and influential landlords to promote animal protection and raise awareness that bear baiting contravenes Islamic teachings.
- Offering alternative livelihoods for bear owners, so that they leave bear baiting behind for good.
- Exposing cruelty, by monitoring, uncovering and tackling the exploitation of bears, including bear dancing and begging, which may be increasing as bear baiting declines.
- Providing sanctuary for bears who are surrendered or rescued from bear baiting – though our ultimate goal is for bears to remain in the wild.
Discover more about our work with the Balkasar bear sanctuary in Pakistan.
Support our work to end bear baiting
Thanks to your support, we are making an impact.
What we have achieved so far: in numbers
- 145 bears rescued since 1997.
- 982 landlords moved to support our work since 2009.
- 111 alternative livelihood packages provided to landlords to stop bear baiting since 2008.
- 75 bears are currently living peacefully at the Balkasar sanctuary.
With your support, donation and voice, we can stop bears being subjected to a lifetime of pain and distress in Pakistan.
Latest campaign news
South Korea takes steps to end cruel bear bile industry, following our campaigning with local partners
Countries that keep captive bears for traditional medicine must follow this positive example to end the captive breeding of bears for their bile
Raja the rescue bear cub recovering well at sanctuary
Raja, a 10-month-old bear cub who arrived weak and underweight at our Balkasar partner sanctuary in Pakistan, on New Year’s Eve, is growing fast and settling...
Her suffering has ended
Maya, the former \"dancing\" bear is preparing to live the rest of her life in a sanctuary, free from suffering.